StatOnTheSide
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This is a very long thread and I did not read it completely. I have a recommendation for you.
Thinking Mathematically -- J. Mason, L. Burton, K. Stacey
It is a fantastic book. Thinking process can be divided into two categories. Thinking by analogy and thinking by originality. Most contest problems are based on analogy. You try to solve 10 tough ones based on a trick. You won't go anywhere with it. You look at the solution and then you solve the later problems using the same trick.
Original thinking on the other hand involves inventing the trick. It might sometimes not even be based on a trick and will be a very rigorous approach completely based on recognizing a pattern and then formally providing the proof for it.
This book helps you to think originally. He walks you through the process of thinking mathematically. I think that solving problems by analogy in Olympiads and Putnams, though very much a great achievement, especially for a high school kid, is still not same as thinking originally. Srinivasa Ramanujam is a classic example of an original thinker. Who taught him all the tricks? He was in India during the British Raj and there was nobody to talk to let alone get training in mathematics. He basically thought of everything in the most original way and must have had an extremely good cognitive ability based on which, he could see patterns very well. Based on that, he made conjectures and proved them.
There is IQ and there is also the testosterone. People with high testosterone just go ahead and do it without caring for anything else. I think that unless you develop a don't care attitude to what others say when they are being negative and unless you have love for mathematics, you will find it hard to do mathematics. If you love mathematics, I am sure you will find your way out like most of the others have done.
I am not sure if you are looking for a response at this time as this is a very old thread but I just thought of sharing my thoughts on this.
Thinking Mathematically -- J. Mason, L. Burton, K. Stacey
It is a fantastic book. Thinking process can be divided into two categories. Thinking by analogy and thinking by originality. Most contest problems are based on analogy. You try to solve 10 tough ones based on a trick. You won't go anywhere with it. You look at the solution and then you solve the later problems using the same trick.
Original thinking on the other hand involves inventing the trick. It might sometimes not even be based on a trick and will be a very rigorous approach completely based on recognizing a pattern and then formally providing the proof for it.
This book helps you to think originally. He walks you through the process of thinking mathematically. I think that solving problems by analogy in Olympiads and Putnams, though very much a great achievement, especially for a high school kid, is still not same as thinking originally. Srinivasa Ramanujam is a classic example of an original thinker. Who taught him all the tricks? He was in India during the British Raj and there was nobody to talk to let alone get training in mathematics. He basically thought of everything in the most original way and must have had an extremely good cognitive ability based on which, he could see patterns very well. Based on that, he made conjectures and proved them.
There is IQ and there is also the testosterone. People with high testosterone just go ahead and do it without caring for anything else. I think that unless you develop a don't care attitude to what others say when they are being negative and unless you have love for mathematics, you will find it hard to do mathematics. If you love mathematics, I am sure you will find your way out like most of the others have done.
I am not sure if you are looking for a response at this time as this is a very old thread but I just thought of sharing my thoughts on this.